Mass
Line Ceases Publication
Reprinted from Mass
Line , a Marxist-Leninist newspaper in India, October-November
1991
This will
be the last issue of Mass Line. The reasons leading to this sudden
death are clear from the accompanying press release. Two issues
are involved in these decisions. The attempt to resolve the inherent
contradiction between the existing all-India structure of the
CRC,CPI(ML) and the tasks of leading national liberation struggles
by dissolving the "all-India structure" of the party,
transforming existing State units into national parties and forming
a coordination committee is one of them. The other is the way
this has been done: through a decision of the all-India leading
committee without any political preparation or consultation with
the rank and file and the ideological views underlying all this.
This method is not only undemocratic. It calls into question the
claims of trying to fight against "social fascism" and
reveals the aim of throwing the party rank and file into confusion
and demoralisation. The new jargon on "Marxist-Leninist fundamentalism"
conceals this aim which in essence tries to liquidate the organization
and its ideological basis. By accepting these views raised by
its erstwhile Secretary, the Leading Committee has endorsed them.
Those
involved in publishing Mass Line are quite aware that an all-India
journal like Mass Line can play an important role despite the
limitations imposed by its language of publication. We are also
confident that a sizable section of our readers and friends will
provide us with the necessary support to continue publication.
But, in the final analysis, the defeat of this liquidationism
can only be accomplished by building up revolutionary Marxist-Leninist
parties in the nations. Parties which boldly take up the historical
task of New Democratic revolution through leading the national
liberation struggle and thus contribute in resolving the crisis
faced by the international communist movement. Right now this
calls for a total concentration of efforts in the nations. Because
the bitter fact is that those sections determined to take up this
orientation are at present unable to divide their attention in
order to simultaneously carry out the all-India tasks which are
inevitable for waging successful national liberation struggle
under proletarian leadership.
This handicapped
situation is not of their making. It is the result of the revisionist
line and practice developed by the leadership of the erstwhile
CRC,CPI(ML), particularly over the past four years. And it is
not at all surprising that it chose to fully expose its liquidationist
designs, in a manner deliberately aimed at demoralising and wrecking
the party, at a time when the struggle against this revisionism
had sharply emerged and gained partial success. It is true that
the recent turn of events in the former socialist countries and
the howling glee of the bourgeoisie over the "collapse of
communism" have enabled the wreckers to overcome their fear
of exposure and finally come out with their banner of opposing
"Marxist-Leninist fundamentalism". But this apparent
burst of confidence is actually a desperate attempt to run for
cover preening pompous sermons on the mysteriously growing "gap"
between the brilliant theoretical leaps of the leadership and
failure of the rank and file to "translate these ideas into
practice" can hardly serve to hide this undignified retreat.
As the outcome of the recently held Kerala State Conference proved,
the major section of the rank and file were getting rather weary
of such idealist acrobatics and confirmed in their suspicion that
it was leading them away from the revolutionary orientation adopted
at the 2nd all-India Conference held in 1987. We must not lose
sight of this significant lesson taught by the "backward"
rank and file because it points out the real strengths and weaknesses,
the potential for overcoming the present crisis, in the midst
of the confusion and demoralization.
The liquidationist
line promoted by the leadership and accepted by the majority within
the leading committee of the erstwhile CRC, CPI(ML) has focused
its attack on "Marxist-Leninist fundamentalism". What
is meant by this is "the belief in some of the fundamentals
such as class struggle, proletarian dictatorship etc., as inviolable".
The argument is that they must be "redefined" in the
light of contemporary developments. But there is redefinition
and redefinition; to develop and enrich basic principles of Marxist
theory and to define away these revolutionary principles as the
revisionists have done. The whole course of development of the
international communist movement since Marx shows the redefining
and refining of these principles in close relation to the practical
movement aimed at transforming the world. Some of these efforts
have stood the test of time. Some have proved to be erroneous
or imperfect. And each momentous turn of history, such as the
ongoing collapse of the social fascist system, calls for a re-examination
of concepts and development of fresh ideas and practice. But such
turns of history have also produced fresh breeds of deserters
from the proletarian camp, all in the name of "redefinition".
And so one must be clear about the trend, the direction concealed
by the usage of this innocent word. The liquidationist line adopted
by the leadership of the erstwhile CRC,CPI(ML) has made it clear
that it essentially negates all the advances achieved by the international
communist movement, mainly under the leadership of Lenin and Mao.
Though paying lip service to their contributions, when it attacks
"fundamentalism" and talks about redefinition it is
attacking "... a typical, common, universal outlook that
dominated the whole communist movement after Marx, causing the
degeneration of scientific Marxism into Marxist fundamentalism".
(From K. Venu-s resignation letter)
Can there
be a "scientific" Marxism which denies the very principles
which separate this philosophy/political thought from others?
Can there be a "scientific" Marxism which remains within
the confines of abstract thought and refuses to be tested and
enriched through practice grounded in the specific reality of
one-s society? The answer is a clear No. The denial of Marxist
principles and links with practice is clear from the whole thrust
of the argument against a new bogey "fundamentalism"
and the accompanying vague call for "conceptual and organizational
restructuring" of the party in order to tackle the "most
important immediate task" of fighting against "social
fascism". This idea is yet to be spelt out. But the thoughts
lurking behind it tend to see social fascism as a product of the
vanguard role of the communist party. The historical conditions
which have made this role necessary and the practical problems
of waging revolution against a ruthless enemy are far removed
from these speculations on a "fight against social fascism".
Mass Line
does not support this view. It firmly believes that the contemporary
crisis of the international communist movement can only be resolved
by those who defend the gains of communism in the face of the
bourgeois onslaught and strive to advance the revolutionary proletarian
struggle by basing themselves on and developing Marxism from the
heights already scaled by Mao Tsetung. As our readers are aware,
Mass Line has consistently followed this orientation upheld by
the 2nd Conference of the CRC,CPI(ML). It has never flagged in
defending communism and has continuously publicized the ongoing
efforts to regroup the international communist movement from a
Maoist perspective through the Revolutionary Internationalist
Movement. In keeping with this orientation it has brought to its
readers information about the views and practice of other revolutionary
parties, within India as well as abroad. But it has also not shied
away from breaking with the dead traditions of Marxist-Leninist
journalism in India, in content and form. Nor has it hesitated
to criticize dogmas and point out weaknesses in Marxist theory
and practice revealed by contemporary developments or open its
pages to differing views. We do not believe that this was the
result of some unique qualities shared by those involved in publishing
this journal. It emerged from, and in turn enriched, a revolutionary
orientation.
The decisions
imposed by the now dissolved leading committee have put us in
an awkward position. It reminds one of Mao-s teachings on practising
Marxism, being open and above-board and uniting with the many.
The corollary was that those practising revisionism inevitably
take to underhanded methods and cause splits. Mass Line was in
a phase of reorganization. In light of the dismal state of affairs
in the organization, the editor had already proposed resignation
to the committee and a request to be reassigned to organizational
work. But that could not mean the end of Mass Line. While differing
with some of his assessments and plans the rest of those involved
in publishing Mass Line had supported this proposal and gone ahead
with future plans. These included the publication of a "Theoretical
Supplement" and the opening up of a broad debate on the questions
of proletarian democracy involving a wide range of political views.
Active efforts were going on to solicit articles for the Supplement,
secure regular columnists and widen the distribution of the journal
through a subscription drive. Each one of these steps were taken
with the full knowledge and at least partial involvement of the
leadership which was already involved in the conspiracy to wreck
the party, not to speak of Mass Line.
More than
a conspiracy which chose a method of operation intended to cause
the maximum damage to the party and put its rank and file and
organs in the most awkward situation, what is revealed is a totally
contemptuous attitude towards the masses and the continuation
of an irresponsible attitude towards this journal. This irresponsible
attitude has continuously hampered the publishing of Mass Line
in terms of getting timely information and support. It has also
defeated some of the initiatives taken by Mass Line to interact
with various progressive trends, particularly those related to
women-s and Dalit issues. If Mass Line has managed to survive
and maintain a certain standard, despite reduction in pages and
missed issues, the credit undoubtedly goes to a small group of
dedicated well wishers and our readers. It is to them that we
apologize for being unable to continue publication. Particularly
to those who had recently subscribed expressing confidence in
our ability to fulfill promises. Our insistence on refunding the
balance due to all subscribers has been graciously accepted by
the now dissolved leading committee. This will be completed by
November though we will have to request subscribers from abroad
to forfeit it for obvious reasons.
It is
painful to be forced to say good-bye at a time when there is so
much to do and each weapon counts. We are stepping back, but with
rage and determination to spring back into battle. And we are
confident that we will be back with you in the future to man positions
standing on a truly solid, revolutionary foundation. Till then,
good-bye.
The following is a
draft document published in December 1990, written under the leadership
of K. Venu, secretary of the now dissolved All-India Leading Committee
of the Central Reorganization Committee , Communist Party of India
(Marxist-Leninist). - AWTW
1. Introduction
1.1. The
recent wave of democratic upsurges in former socialist countries
such as China, the Soviet Union and those in East Europe have
raised many questions and challenges in front of the communists
all over the world. The repercussions of these developments are
not confined to the communist movement, rather they have shaken
up the whole political realm at the global level. Communists,
non-communists, and anti-communists, none can stand aloof. Questions
are raised from various corners and answers are given from different
angles. The communists have to grasp the depth of these problems
and find out appropriate answers. It is with such an approach
that this study is conducted.
1.2. The
Marxist-Leninists in general all over the world have welcomed
the recent wave of revolts and democratic upsurges against the
social-fascist regimes of the former socialist countries. The
Marxist-Leninists had already evaluated that the social system
in these former socialist countries had degenerated into capitalism.
Hence these upsurges are understood by them as an expression of
the severe crisis faced by this particular form of capitalism.
While hailing the people-s struggles, Marxist-Leninist forces
have cautioned them that bourgeois democracy or an unconcealed
capitalism is not the solution. They have been called upon to
continue the struggle for genuine communism. Mao-s attempts leading
to the lessons of the Cultural Revolution have been hailed as
an alternative model to rely on and develop.
1.3. From
the angle of the traditional Marxist-Leninist interpretation of
capitalist restoration in the former socialist countries, this
interpretation is sufficient. The capitalist roaders in the ruling
communist parties of these countries transformed the budding socialist
economy into a capitalist one by promoting, instead of restricting,
bourgeois right and relying on material incentives for promoting
production. The resultant bureaucratic capitalism has led to the
present crisis in all these countries. This explanation is basically
correct in relation to the economic aspect of capitalist restoration.
But it is not sufficient to answer the principal political issue
raised by the masses in these countries. Their major demand is
the dismantling of the existing political system which ensures
the monopoly of the communist party. The Marxist-Leninists have
correctly pointed out that these parties are not communist and
that the political system there represents the dictatorship of
a new bourgeoisie, social fascism. But so far as the masses of
these countries are concerned, there is no difference between
the essential structures of this social fascist political system
and those which existed earlier when they were socialist. Even
in China, where the Cultural Revolution gave rise to a new political
situation, the state structure under Deng is not essentially different
from the one which existed previously. The distinction is mainly
in content, in who leads the State, Marxist-Leninists or revisionists.
But the people are not able to see any qualitative difference
in the structures of the political system, even though they can
recognize the changes in their living conditions. That is why
a mere call to re-establish socialism and a genuine dictatorship
of the proletariat will not be sufficient.
1.4. Revisionists
under the leadership of Gorbachev attribute the responsibility
for the whole crisis of their bureaucratic capitalism to the deviations
committed by Stalin. Using the cover of Stalin-s mistakes they
justify the basic changes openly implemented by Gorbachev. Gorbachev
is actually trying to resolve the internal crisis faced by bureaucratic
capitalism by fully and openly introducing Western capitalist
methods both at the economic and political level. This is intensifying
the contradiction, within the ruling party and the political system
of the Soviet Union, between the old bureaucratic bourgeoisie
well entrenched in the system and the new bourgeoisie under the
leadership of Gorbachev who want to dismantle the decadent bureaucratic
system. Up till now Gorbachev has been able to cleverly manoeuvre
and keep his lead in the process, though the mounting national
struggles in different nationalities are bound to destroy the
centralized imperialist system headed by him.
1.5. The
internal restructuring initiated by Gorbachev-s perestroika is
extended to the international arena, leading to the collusion
between the two imperialist blocs led by the U.S. and the Soviet
Union. This is accompanied by a process of realignment of economic
and political forces at the global level. Along with his realization
about the weakness of the bureaucratic system within the country,
Gorbachev was also realizing the weakness of the social-imperialist
neocolonial system, mainly maintained through manipulations at
the state to state level, as compared to the dominant neocolonial
structures system headed by the US. Hence the initiative by Gorbachev
for collusion, envisaging a process of gradual absorption of Soviet
social imperialism within this neocolonial structure. For the
time being contention for control over the resources of the world
will continue at a lower level.
1.6. The
struggle between the bureaucrat bourgeoisie and the new bourgeoisie
in the former socialist countries has not been completed, even
though the new bourgeoisie has won decisive victories in the East
European countries. Though Gorbachev, representing the new bourgeoisie
of the Soviet Union, is in the lead, the powerful bureaucrat bourgeoisie
within the party and the army have not yet accepted their defeat.
The possibility of a coup by them cannot be ruled out. But that
cannot stem the present tide of full-fledged and open capitalist
restoration which has already reached the final stage in these
countries. In China, the bureaucrat bourgeoisie have been successful
in holding on to power after brutally suppressing the people-s
revolt against the social-fascist system and defeating the new
bourgeoisie within the party and the army, at least temporarily.
But the social fascists in China will not be able to continue
for long as the people-s revolt is mounting. This may even take
new dimensions, because of the powerful influence of the Cultural
Revolution led by Mao, which was already manifested in the previous
people-s upsurge there. The bureaucrat bourgeoisie of Albania,
Vietnam, North Korea, and Cuba are also holding on to their guns
even though the people-s unrest is developing there also. The
overthrow of the social fascists in these countries is also not
far off.
1.7. The
so-called communist parties which have been overthrown in the
former socialist countries are disintegrating. Some are even disappearing.
The remaining forces and sections are getting polarized along
the above-mentioned lines of supporting either the bureaucrat
bourgeoisie or the new bourgeoisie. The same polarization is being
extended to the revisionist parties of other countries also. In
India, the Communist Party of India (CPI) is officially supporting
the new bourgeois line of Gorbachev, though other elements are
also there as a minor force. On the other hand, the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) has officially opposed the latest positions
of Gorbachev while generally supporting the bureaucrat bourgeois
sections in the Soviet party as well as in the Chinese party.
But in the CPI(M) also elements supporting the Gorbachev line
are reported to be active. Some degenerated Marxist-Leninist forces
at the international level as well as in India are also getting
polarized along these lines.
1.8. The
bourgeoisie and the anti-communist forces all over the world have
been utilizing these developments to propagate that communism
is dead. Even though Marxist-Leninist forces were propagating
that it was not socialism, but social fascism which was existing
in all these former socialist countries, the fact is that people
were not fully convinced or were not accepting this view as such.
So the bourgeoisie have been successful in projecting the overthrow
or the crisis of social fascism as the defeat of socialism and
communism. Of course, the bourgeoisie is realizing that the crisis
faced by state monopoly capitalism and social fascism is going
to engulf them also. But they have been able to cover it up, because
of the setback suffered by the communist movement. Under these
circumstances, even among people who are generally in favour of
socialism, doubts and apprehensions about the viability of socialism
have already started raising their heads.
1.9. In
this situation, it is the duty of the genuine communists to look
back and identify the root cause for the problem faced by the
communist movement. Without answering the basic issues raised
in front of us, no communist organization can advance in its own
practice. Such basic questions, if left unanswered for long, will
demoralize the cadres and weaken the organization. Therefore,
the resolution of these problems, or at least attempts at resolution,
must be taken up as an urgent political task. It is in this spirit
that we call upon all genuine communists to re-examine the whole
history of the communist movement and the basic concepts we have
held aloft so far, so as to get a clear picture of the dictatorship
of the proletariat as practised until now.
2. Dictatorship
of the Proletariat
2.1. The
concept of the dictatorship of the proletariat is central to the
Marxian scheme of proletarian revolution, socialist construction
and the advancement towards communism. Ever since this concept
was put forward in a clear-cut manner by Marx and Engels, the
entire development of the international communist movement has
been inseparably linked with the practice centred around this
concept. That is why we have to examine the emergence and development
of this concept and its practice through its different phases.
2.2. Let
us start with the clear-cut statement made by Marx on this subject:
"As to myself, no credit is due to me for discovering the
existence of classes in modern society or the struggle between
them. Long before me bourgeois historians had described the historical
development of this class struggle and bourgeois economists the
economic anatomy of the classes. What I did that was new was to
prove: 1) that the existence of classes is merely linked to particular
historical phases in the development of production, 2) that the
class struggle necessarily leads to the dictatorship of the proletariat,
3) that this dictatorship itself only leads to the transition
to the abolition of all classes and to a classless society."
(from the "Letter to Joseph Weydemeyer", Marx Engels
Selected Works (MESW), Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1973, Vol.
I, p. 528)
2.3. Along
with such a clarification Marx had summed up the experience of
the European revolutions of 1848-51, deriving this explicit conclusion:
"All revolutions perfected this machine instead of smashing
it." (from The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, MESW,
Vol. I, p. 471) Thus he made it clear that the proletarian revolution
has to smash the existing state machine. And after the most valuable
experiences of the Paris Commune, in the preface of the Communist
Manifesto dated June 24, 1872, Marx and Engels recognized that
the programme of the Communist Manifesto "has in some details
become out-of-date", because "one thing especially was
proved by the Commune, namely, that "the working class cannot
simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield it
for its own purposes-". (MESW, Vol. I, p. 99)
3. Marx and
the Paris Commune
3.1. The
Paris Commune provided the answer to the most important question:
what is to replace the smashed state machine? In his first outline
of The Civil War in France, Marx beautifully expressed his concept
of the Commune: "The Commune - the reabsorption of the state
power by society, as its own living forces instead of as forces
controlling and subduing it, by the popular masses themselves,
forming their own force instead of the organized force of their
suppression - the political form of their social emancipation,
instead of the artificial force appropriated by their oppressors
(their own force opposed to and organized against them) of society
wielded for their oppression by their enemies. This form was simple
like all great things." ("On the Paris Commune",
Moscow, 1976, p. 153)
3.2. In
the final version of The Civil War in France, he observed its
functioning thus: "The Paris Commune was, of course, to serve
as a model to all the great industrial centres of France. The
Communal regime once established in Paris and the secondary centres,
the old centralized government would in the provinces, too, have
to give way to the self-government of the producers. In a rough
sketch of national organization, which the Commune had no time
to develop, it states clearly that the Commune was to be the political
form of even the smallest country hamlet, and that in the rural
districts the standing army was to be replaced by a national militia,
with an extremely short term of service.... The few but important
functions which still would remain for a central government were
not to be suppressed, as has been intentionally misstated, but
were to be discharged by Communal, and therefore strictly responsible
agents. The unity of the nation was not to be broken, but on the
contrary, to be organized by the Communal Constitution, and to
become a reality by the destruction of the state power which claimed
to be the embodiment of that unity independent of, and superior
to, the nation itself, from which it was but a parasitic excrescence...
nothing could be more foreign to the spirit of the Commune than
to supersede the universal suffrage by hierarchic investiture.
("On the Paris Commune", Moscow, 1976, p. 73)
3.3. How
did such a new political institution come into being? Marx explains:
"The first decree of the Commune... was the suppression of
the standing army, and the substitution for it of the armed people.
The Commune was formed of the municipal councillors, chosen by
universal suffrage in the various wards of the town, responsible
and revocable at short terms. The majority of its members were
naturally working men, or acknowledged representatives of the
working class. The Commune was to be a working, not a parliamentary
body, executive and legislative at the same time. Instead of continuing
to be the agent of the central government, the police was at once
stripped of its political attributes and turned into the responsible
and at all times revocable agent of the Commune. So were the officials
of all other branches of the administration." (Ibid., p.
71)
3.4. Out
of all these measures, the first decree, "suppression of
the standing army and the substitution for it of the armed people",
is the crucial act differentiating the Commune from all the old
states. Lenin declared that this "...constitutes the very
essence of the Commune...." ("The Tasks of the Proletariat
in Our Revolution - A New Type of State", Collected Works
(LCW), Vol. 24, p. 68) In his first outline to The Civil War in
France, Marx wrote: "The people had only to organize this
militia on a national scale, to have done away with the standing
armies; the first economical condition... for all social improvements,
discarding at once..., this constant danger of government usurpation
of class rule at the same time the safest guarantee against foreign
aggression and making in fact the costly military apparatus impossible
in all other states...." ("On the Paris Commune",
p. 154) In other words, the replacement of the standing army by
the armed people was considered by Marx as a measure which would
help the people to keep in check the danger of both internal usurpation
and foreign intervention. Thus the Communal form of political
system which not only mobilized and organized the political will
of the working masses but also ensured its enforcement through
an armed force which truly represented this will - i.e., the armed
people. Marx considered that "...it affords the rational
medium in which the class struggle can run through its different
phases in the most rational and humane way." (Ibid, p. 156,
emphasis added)
3.5. The
Paris Commune lasted only for a few months. Summing up the reasons
for its defeat Marx pointed out two mistakes. First, the Communards
did not take the offensive against the retreating bourgeoisie.
Second, the Central Committee surrendered its power too soon to
make way for the Commune. Later on Engels repeated this point:
"...it was the want of centralization and authority that
cost the Paris Commune its life. Once you have won you can do
with this authority what you like... but the fight needs to have
all our force brought together in a fist...." ("Letter
to Carlo Terraghi", "On the Paris Commune", p.
292, emphasis added) Thus in their view, the defeat of the Commune
did not lie in its unique structure - the absence of a standing
army, elective posts, etc. In fact we can see that they have always
upheld the Commune as the model of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
They pinpointed the reason for defeat in the Central Committee-s
handing over its power too soon (before winning), i.e., the absence
of a centralized authority necessary to safeguard the Commune.
Yet Marx and Engels never undertook a detailed re-examination
of the Commune lessons in the light of defeat, and left many questions
unanswered.
4. Lenin and
Proletarian State Power
4.1. After
the Paris Commune, the October Revolution in Russia provided the
next historical opportunity for materializing the concept of the
dictatorship of the proletariat. The theoretical and practical
experiences achieved by the Bolshevik Party in this regard, under
the leadership of Lenin, still remain as the fundamental positions
of the international communist movement on this question. So let
us examine Lenin-s concept as well as the experiences of the Bolshevik
Party in relation to the realization of the dictatorship of the
proletariat.
4.2. It
was in the period after the February Revolution in Russia that
serious discussions on the question of state and revolution emerged
among the communists. Lenin took it up and tried to answer various
questions raised from different angles and formulated the Marxist
position on the subject. Lenin-s famous book The State and Revolution,
which was first published in August 1917, was the result of these
attempts.
4.3. Lenin
based all his analysis on the following understanding of the Marxist
position on the state: "The essence of Marx-s theory of the
state has been mastered only by those who realize that the dictatorship
of a single class is necessary not only for every class society
in general, not only for the proletariat which has overthrown
the bourgeoisie, but also for the entire historical period which
separates capitalism from "classless society-, from Communism.
Bourgeois states are most varied in form, but their essence is
the same; all these states, whatever their form, in the final
analysis are inevitably the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. The
transition from capitalism to communism is certainly bound to
yield tremendous abundance and variety of political forms, but
the essence will inevitably be the same: the dictatorship of the
proletariat." (LCW, Vol. 25, p. 418)
4.4. During
this period leading up to the October Revolution Lenin was basing
his arguments mainly on the lessons of the Paris Commune as evaluated
by Marx and Engels. Lenin evaluated the basic characteristic of
the Paris Commune in this way: "The Commune... appears to
have replaced the smashed state machine -only- by fuller democracy:
abolition of the standing army; all officials to be elected and
subject to recall. But as a matter of fact this -only- signifies
a gigantic replacement of certain institutions by other institutions
of a fundamentally different type. This is exactly a case of -quantity
being transformed into quality-: democracy, introduced as fully
and consistently as is at all conceivable, is transformed from
bourgeois into proletarian democracy; from the state - a special
force for the suppression of a particular class - into something
which is no longer the state proper." (Ibid, p. 424) Lenin
pointed out that while the Commune retained the representative
institutions, it could overcome the parliamentarism of bourgeois
democracy by abolishing the division of labour between the legislative
and the executive. (Ibid, p. 429)
4.5. Lenin
defined the nature of democracy during the transition period thus:
"Democracy for the vast majority of the people and suppression
by force, i.e., exclusion from democracy, of the exploiters and
oppressors of the people - this is the change democracy undergoes
during the transition from capitalism to communism." (Ibid.,
p. 467) Further, he explained the relation between democracy and
the state. "Democracy is a form of state, one of its varieties.
Consequently, like every state, it represents, on the one hand,
the organized, systematic use of force against persons; but, on
the other hand, it signifies the formal recognition of equality
of citizens, the equal right of all to determine the structure
of, and to administer, the state. This, in turn, results in the
fact that, at a certain stage in the development of democracy,
it first welds together the class that wages a revolutionary struggle
against capitalism - the proletariat, and enables it to crush,
smash to atoms, wipe off the face of the earth the bourgeois,
even the republican-bourgeois, state machine, the standing army,
the police and the bureaucracy and to substitute for them a more
democratic state machine, but a state machine nevertheless, in
the shape of armed workers who proceed to form a militia involving
the entire population. Here "quantity turns into quality-;
such a degree of democracy implies overstepping the boundaries
of bourgeois society and beginning its socialist reorganization."
(Ibid, p. 477)
4.6. Lenin
stressed the point, following Engels, that "the abolition
of the state means also the abolition of democracy: that the withering
away of the state means the withering away of democracy."
(Ibid, p. 460) Lenin linked this withering away of democracy with
its advance. He said, "Communism alone is capable of providing
really complete democracy, and the more complete it is, the sooner
it will become unnecessary and wither away on its own accord."
(Ibid, p. 468)
4.7. "...When
there are no classes (i.e., when there is no distinction between
the members of society as regards their relation to the social
means of production), only then -the state ceases to exist-, and
-it becomes possible to speak of freedom-. Only then will a truly
complete democracy become possible and be realized, a democracy
without any exceptions whatever. And only then will democracy
begin to wither away... people will gradually become accustomed
to observing the elementary rules of social intercourse that have
been known for centuries and repeated for thousands of years in
all copy-book maxims. They will become accustomed to observing
them without force, without coercion, without subordination, without
the special apparatus for coercion called the state." (Ibid,
p. 467) This was how Lenin envisaged the withering away of the
state and the rise of a new social organization under communism.
4.8. Like
in the case of the Commune, the significance of the Soviet form
of political organization was seen in the fact that it enabled
the proletariat and the working masses "to take the organs
of state power directly into their own hands, in order that they
themselves should constitute these organs of state power."
(LCW, Vol. 23, p. 326) Lenin said: "The people need a republic
in order to educate the masses in the methods of democracy. We
need not only representation along democratic lines, but the building
of the entire state administration from the bottom up by the masses
themselves, their effective participation in all of life-s steps,
their active role in the administration." (LCW, Vol. 24,
p. 181, emphasis added) Following Marx, Lenin repeatedly stressed
the significance of abolishing the standing army and replacing
it with the armed people as a means of drawing the masses into
the administration of society and to check the danger of restoration.
5. The Soviets
and the Practice of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat
5.1. Lenin
put forward the overall practical programme for the seizure of
power by the working class in his famous April Theses, with the
resounding slogan, "All Power to the Soviets". He defined
that the new state will not be a parliamentary republic, "but
a republic of Soviets of Workers-, Agricultural Labourers- and
Peasants- Deputies throughout the country from top to bottom".
(LCW, Vol. 24, p. 23) Lenin tried to introduce the major aspects
of proletarian state power which had emerged under the Paris Commune,
except the principle of universal suffrage. Though the dissolution
of the standing army was accepted in principle, it also could
not be put into practice.
5.2. This
overall programme for seizure of power was implemented by the
second All-Russia Congress of Soviets of Workers- and Soldiers-
Deputies held on October 25-26, 1917. The Congress took power
into its own hands and decreed that "all power in the localities
shall pass to the Soviets of Workers-, Soldiers- and Peasants-
Deputies, which must guarantee genuine revolutionary order".
(LCW, Vol. 26, p. 247) Transfer of the land of the landed proprietors
to the peasant committees, protection of the rights of the soldiers
by introducing complete democracy in the army, establishment of
worker-s control over production, ensuring the convocation of
the Constituent Assembly at the time appointed, etc., were also
decreed.
5.3. The
political system which was being developed in this way was centred
around the Soviets as the organs of political power. The system
of proportional representation along with the right to recall
was adopted. An important crisis in the system surfaced in relation
to the promised convocation of the Constituent Assembly. This
was a demand and promise upheld by the communists before and after
the revolution. The Constituent Assembly which was elected immediately
after the revolution was still representing the pre-revolutionary
situation. So it was not prepared to accept the new authority
of the Soviets and its Central Executive Committee.
5.4. Under
such circumstances, the Bolsheviks decided to withdraw their delegation
from the Constituent Assembly. It was justifiable in the sense
that the power of the Soviets which had emerged through revolution
was really representing the political will of the vast majority
of the people. And this qualitative change had to be reflected
in the Constituent Assembly. Finally the Central Committee of
the All-Russia Soviets dissolved the Constituent Assembly through
a decree. With this the change over to the new political system
was reaching a significant point. At the same time it was facing
new challenges.
5.5. In
a major policy declaration made a few months after the revolution,
Lenin defined that the "socialist character of Soviet, i.e.,
proletarian democracy, as concretely applied today, lies first
in the fact that the electors are the working and exploited people;
the bourgeoisie is excluded. Secondly, it lies in the fact that
all bureaucratic formalities and restrictions of elections are
abolished, the people themselves determine the order and time
of elections, and are completely free to recall any elected person...."
(LCW, Vol. 27, p. 272)
5.6. He
defined the other aspect of the new system. "Dictatorship,
however, is a big word, and big words should not be thrown about
carelessly. Dictatorship is iron rule, government that is revolutionarily
bold, swift and ruthless in suppressing both exploiters and hooligans."
(LCW, Vol. 27, p. 265) In reply to Kautsky-s charge that the Soviet
system is dictatorial and not democratic, Lenin emphasized: "The
revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat is rule won and
maintained by the use of violence by the proletariat against the
bourgeoisie, rule that is unrestricted by any laws." (LCW,
Vol. 28, p. 236) Lenin also refuted Kautsky-s argument that classes
can only rule, but not govern, by pointing out examples from history
where classes not only ruled but also governed. Here Lenin-s argument
was actually based on the assumption that the dictatorship of
the proletariat is a system in which the working class itself
is governing.
5.7. But
what was developed as the new political system was gradually coming
under the control of the Communist Party. Lenin explained the
situation thus: "What happens is that the Party, shall we
say, absorbs the vanguard of the proletariat, and this vanguard
exercises the dictatorship of the proletariat. The dictatorship
cannot be exercised or the functions of the government performed
without a foundation such as the trade unions. These functions,
however, have to be performed through the medium of special institutions
which are also of a new type, namely the Soviets.... The whole
is like an arrangement of cogwheels.... It cannot work without
a number of -transmission belts- running from the vanguard to
the mass of the advanced class, and from the latter to the mass
of the working people." (LCW, Vol. 32, pp. 20-21)
5.8. Further,
Lenin categorically declared the role of the Communist Party thus:
"After two and a half years of the Soviet power we came out
in the Communist International and told the world that the dictatorship
of the proletariat would not work except through the Communist
Party." (LCW, Vol. 32, p. 199) Now the circle is complete.
The practical programme for establishing the dictatorship of the
proletariat which started with the attractive slogan, "All
Power to the Soviets", ended with the reality that the dictatorship
of the proletariat was exercised through the Communist Party,
where the Soviets became mere cogwheels in the machine. Even though
Kautsky-s criticism was coming from the angle of bourgeois parliamentarism,
the fact remains that in the present-day world situation, when
a qualitatively new political system as envisaged in a genuine
dictatorship of the proletariat has not emerged as a historical
reality, it is not the class, but its party that actually governs.
5.9. The
position taken by Lenin in relation to the party and the dictatorship
of the proletariat is not very different from the position Stalin
adopted and implemented. Stalin argued that the dictatorship of
the proletariat is "in essence", the dictatorship of
the party. And in exercising this dictatorship, the party uses
the Soviets as mere transition belts like the trade unions, Youth
League, etc. (Concerning Questions of Leninism, Collected Works,
Vol. 8, pp. 14-39) From this position, the nature and course of
development of the bureaucratization process and the emergence
of new classes can easily be traced. Under such a political structure,
the absence of a conscious policy to restrict bourgeois right
and the increasing reliance on material incentive for promoting
production laid the economic foundation for bureaucratic capitalism.
And when we reach the stage of Mao-s finding that under the dictatorship
of the proletariat the bourgeoisie emerges within the party itself,
the picture becomes complete.
5.10.
Here it is important to note that Trotsky-s criticism of Stalin
did not answer any of the basic questions faced by the dictatorship
of the proletariat. His criticism of bureaucratization did not
lead to any basic understanding of the problems faced by the whole
political system under the dictatorship of the proletariat. Rather
he was also upholding the line of the development of the productive
forces practised by Stalin. And as far as the major controversy
between Stalin and Trotsky, that of building socialism in one
country, Stalin was correct.
6. Criticism
by Rosa Luxemburg
6.1. In
her unfinished rough draft on the Russian Revolution written in
prison, Rosa Luxemburg raised many serious criticisms on many
fundamental questions related to the October Revolution. She wrote:
"The basic error of the Lenin-Trotsky theory is that they,
too, just like Kautsky, oppose dictatorship to democracy. "Dictatorship
or democracy- is the way the question is put by Bolsheviks and
Kautsky alike. The latter naturally decides in favour of "democracy-,
that is, of bourgeois democracy, precisely because he opposes
it to the alternative of the socialist revolution. Lenin and Trotsky,
on the other hand, decide in favour of dictatorship in contradistinction
to democracy, and thereby in favour of dictatorship of a handful
of persons, that is, in favour of dictatorship on the bourgeois
model. They are two opposite poles alike being far removed from
a genuine socialist policy...." (Rosa Luxemburg Speaks, New
York, 1970, p. 393)
6.2. She
observed that the model of the dictatorship of the proletariat
established under the leadership of Lenin and Trotsky, after the
October Revolution, was actually trying to eliminate democracy
as such, in the name of "the cumbersome nature of democratic
electoral bodies". Her piercing criticism touched on the
central question raised in relationship to the dictatorship of
the proletariat: "To be sure every democratic institution
has its limits and shortcomings, things which it doubtless shares
with all other human institutions. But the remedy which Trotsky
and Lenin have found, the elimination of democracy as such, is
worse than the disease it is supposed to cure: for it stops up
the very living source from which alone can come the correction
of all the innate shortcomings of social institutions. That source
is the active, untrammeled energetic political life of the broadest
masses of the people." (Ibid, p. 387)
6.3. The
basic defect of the Soviet system is exposed by Rosa in this way:
"Freedom only for the supporters of the government, only
for the members of one party, however numerous they may be, is
no freedom at all. Freedom is always and exclusively freedom for
one who thinks differently. Not because of any fanatical concept
of justice- but because all that is instructive, wholesome and
purifying in political freedom depends on this essential characteristic,
and its effectiveness vanishes when freedom becomes a special
privilege." (Ibid, pp. 389-390)
6.4. Opposing
Lenin-s claim that the Soviet system of proletarian democracy
is a million times better than bourgeois democracy, she evaluated
the situation under the dictatorship of the proletariat practised
by the Bolsheviks thus: "In place of the representative bodies
created by general popular elections, Lenin and Trotsky have laid
down the Soviets as the only true representation of the labouring
masses. But with the repression of political life in the land
as a whole, life in the Soviets must also become more and more
crippled. Without general elections, without unrestricted freedom
of press and assembly, without a free struggle of opinion, life
dies out in every public institution, becomes a mere semblance
of life, in which only the bureaucracy remains as the active element.
Public life gradually falls asleep, a few dozen party leaders
of inexhaustible energy and boundless experience direct and rule."
(Ibid, p. 391)
6.5. Rosa
Luxemburg raised serious criticism on the basic approach of the
Bolshevik leadership: "The tacit assumption underlying the
Lenin-Trotsky theory of the dictatorship is this: that the socialist
transformation is something for which a ready-made formula lies
completed in the pocket of the revolutionary party, which needs
only to be carried out energetically in practice. This is unfortunately
- or perhaps fortunately - not the case. Far from being a sum
of ready-made prescriptions which have only to be applied, the
practical realization of socialism as an economic, social and
judicial system is something which lies completely hidden in the
mists of the future, what we possess in our programme is nothing
but a few main signposts which indicate the general direction
in which to look for the necessary measures, and the indications
are mainly negative in character at that." (Ibid, p. 390)
6.6 Rosa
Luxemburg had raised many other criticisms against the Bolshevik
policy on nationalities, peasant policy, Constituent Assembly,
etc. But after coming out of prison and getting direct information
about the situation in Russia she withdrew some of the criticisms,
and kept silent on some others. She realized the difficulty in
allowing unlimited freedom to the enemies. Even then some of the
observations she made on basic questions like democracy under
the dictatorship of the proletariat are of far-reaching significance
and relevance, while her position on the national question still
remains [word illegible].
7. Mao, New
Democratic State and Cultural Revolution
7.1. Mao-s
attempt to evolve a healthy ideological and political struggle
within the communist party by developing the two-line struggle
to a higher level helped in creating a new atmosphere. Also his
attempt to build a New Democratic state with a broad united front
of different classes under the leadership of the working class
was a departure and development conforming to the different situation
in a semi-colonial condition.
7.2. But
in spite of all these major breakthroughs, it can be seen now
that the New Democratic People-s Dictatorship established immediately
after the completion of the revolution in China and the dictatorship
of the proletariat which followed did not mark any significant
advancement from the basic framework developed by Lenin and Stalin.
Since the New Democratic state was formed as a united front of
different class forces, some other political parties other than
the communist party were also participating in it. But all these
parties were accepting the leadership and the authority of the
communist party. Therefore, in effect, the situation was not much
different from that in a state with single-party rule. This is
one of the reasons why the advancement from this state of affairs
to that of the dictatorship of the proletariat went on smoothly.
7.3. So
the basic problems faced by the Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin,
namely the lack of a political system in which the people can
directly participate and assert their political will, socialization
of the means of production leading to centralization and the accompanying
bureaucratization of the whole system, were all manifested in
China also. Hence, the same process of capitalist restoration
which had already reached an advanced stage in the Soviet Union
had started in China also.
7.4. Mao
could realize the gravity of the situation. He initiated investigations
at the theoretical level as well as attempts at the practical
level to break out of this situation. His theory on continuing
the class struggle under the dictatorship of the proletariat was
a major breakthrough in this direction. (Lenin had already put
forward the position that class struggle would continue in different
forms throughout the period of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
But he did not develop it as Mao did, finding out new forms of
struggle to deal with the question.) Mao-s breakthroughs on other
theoretical questions were also profound. He identified the economic
reductionist position of the capitalist roaders, manifested in
the form of the theory of the productive forces. His emphasis
on the revolution in the superstructure as well as in the relations
of production, his slogans during the Cultural Revolution such
as "Put politics in command", "Take class struggle
as the key link", "Grasp revolution, promote production",
etc., were all a departure from the thinking that was dominant
in the communist movement until then. Actually he was coming closer
to the crux of the problem when he identified the areas of struggle
in the superstructure, and in the relations of production. Similarly,
he recognized the fact that political power was not in the hands
of the working class and other toiling masses of the people. Here
he identified the crux of the matter - how to bring political
power into the hands of the people.
7.5. He
frankly admitted that there was no way out, no ready-made answer
to the question. As Mao himself pointed out it was actually the
masses who developed the new forms of struggle, the Cultural Revolution.
It was actually a struggle against the structures of the bureaucratization
existing under the dictatorship of the proletariat. As it was
a spontaneous outburst of the masses, the anarchic deviations
it developed were quite natural. But what had to be done was to
systematize all these lessons into a new political system and
form of struggle to be practised under the dictatorship of the
proletariat. But, unfortunately, we cannot see any such positive
development during Mao-s lifetime. As can be seen in Mao-s discussions
with Chang Chun-chiao with regard to the Shanghai Commune, he
had no new answer to the basic question which confronted them
during the Cultural Revolution. Instead he went back to the theme
of the party-s ultimate authority to safeguard the dictatorship
of the proletariat. This was a reflection of the same old concern
which was haunting the communists since the bitter lessons of
the defeat of the Paris Commune. Mao-s confusion is evident in
the following quotation: "In regard to the form of Soviet
political power, as soon as it materialized, Lenin was elated,
deeming it to be a remarkable creation by workers, peasants, and
soldiers, as well as a new form of proletarian dictatorship. Nonetheless,
Lenin had not anticipated then that although the workers, peasants,
and soldiers could use this form of political power it could also
be used by the bourgeoisie, and by Khrushchev. Thus the present
Soviet has been transformed from Lenin-s Soviet to Khrushchev-s
Soviet." (Mao Miscellany, Joint Publications Research Service,
Arlington, VA, USA, Vol. 2, p. 452, emphasis added) Mao-s main
point is that what matters is not the form of the state structure
but which class seizes power. This shows that Marx-s emphasis
on the new form of state under the dictatorship of the proletariat
was almost forgotten.
7.6. The
Cultural Revolution could not break this limitation. On the contrary
it itself revealed the very same limitation. The Cultural Revolution
was possible only because of the leadership of Mao and it developed
outside the existing political structure. Even though Mao had
pointed out that many more Cultural Revolutions will be required
during the whole period of socialism, it is quite clear that they
are not going to continue in the absence of a system where such
Cultural Revolutions are ensured, and Mao and other socialist
leaders in China could not develop or envisage such a system.
What they tried was to establish an all-round dictatorship over
the bourgeoisie, using the same old framework of the dictatorship
of the proletariat. Such an approach appeared to be only more
authoritarian, and even the anti-bureaucratic content of the Cultural
Revolution was misrepresented in this context.
7.7. With
all its limitations, the Cultural Revolution has no doubt helped
Chinese society to take a leap as far as its political development
is concerned. Even though capitalist roaders could seize political
power, the political discussions, investigations and trends that
have come up in the post-Cultural Revolution period clearly reveal
this situation. Though complete information regarding all these
developments are lacking, available information shows that profound
discussions regarding the problems of socialism and the dictatorship
of the proletariat have started there. These developments also
reveal both the positive and negative aspects of the Cultural
Revolution itself, especially the fact that the whole experiment
was limited within the framework of the old concept of the dictatorship
of the proletariat which has already been proved quite inadequate
to face the new problems.
8. Basic Error
8.1. Our
review reveals that the dictatorship of the proletariat practised
so far in the former socialist countries since the October Revolution
all ended up in the dictatorship of the party instead of developing
towards a genuine system of the dictatorship of the proletariat,
though there are many positive lessons to be assimilated by the
working class. The whole system which was established and developed
was mainly based on the concept and practice of the dictatorship
of the proletariat put forward by Lenin. Even Mao could not come
out of that basic framework. So now we have to find out where
and how Lenin went wrong.
8.2. As
has already been pointed out, Lenin was fully relying on the experience
of the Paris Commune as narrated and evaluated by Marx and Engels
in order to develop the concept and practice of the dictatorship
of the proletariat. That is why when the workers in Russia evolved
a new form of organization during the 1905 Revolution, the Soviets,
Lenin immediately upheld it as a potential form of organization
corresponding to the needs of the future proletarian state structure.
8.3. It
was in this background that Lenin raised the most crucial slogan
of the October Revolution, "All Power to the Soviets".
In his most important theoretical work on the state, The State
and Revolution, he envisaged the Soviets as the main form of the
political organ of the proletariat and other sections of the people.
A political system functioning through the Soviets as the representative
bodies of the workers, peasants and soldiers, was envisaged as
something similar to the Commune of Paris.
8.4. In
the political structure of the Paris Commune, the communist party
was not having any direct role. But while evaluating the defeat
of the Commune, Marx pointed to the fact that the Central Committee
handed over power to the Commune too soon. It means that the Central
Committee should have kept the political power in its own hands
for a short period sufficient enough to defeat the enemies and
ensure the functioning of the new proletarian state. But it is
not clear how Marx would have looked upon the role of the Commune
in relation to this new central role of the Central Committee
during that transition period. It is also not clear how such a
situation would have transformed into one where the party had
no central role to play.
8.5. The
absence of any mention of the role of the party in the whole scheme
of the dictatorship of the proletariat as explained in The State
and Revolution by Lenin is very conspicuous. It may be due to
this influence of the political structure of the Paris Commune.
But here, unlike in the Paris Commune, the party was going to
play the crucial role because by the time of the October Revolution,
a party had already been developed as the vanguard representing
the class interests of the proletariat. So this was the crucial
theoretical question to be resolved during that period. Lenin-s
total neglect of this question was a serious lapse leading to
the basic error in developing the understanding of the dictatorship
of the proletariat.
8.6. After
the seizure of power in October, the Congress of the Soviets became
the formal authority of the new political power. But actually
the party was playing the crucial role in evolving all important
policies and tactics behind the scene. In effect the party was
controlling the Soviets, though its specific role in the new state
structure was not defined.
8.7. So,
under the pressure of circumstances, in the face of both external
and internal threats, the party was forced to play the central
role, relegating the Soviets to the background. And Lenin openly
admitted this situation and justified it saying that the proletariat
can exercise its dictatorship only through the party. In order
to justify this new role of the party Lenin even pointed out the
degeneration of the working class, making it unable to rule as
a class. (LCW, Vol. 32, p. 21) Moreover, Lenin was not raising
this question as a specific problem of Russia, but as a universal
problem, thereby making it a principle that only the party can
exercise the dictatorship. Hence Lenin had reached a position
just opposite to that of Marx.
8.8. The
basic point of departure for the system of the dictatorship of
the proletariat had already been identified by Marx while summing
up the lessons of the Paris Commune - "the reabsorption of
state power by society as its own living force". But Lenin
did not take up the questions of translating this concept into
practice, and thereby making a qualitative break with the hitherto
existing understanding on political power. Even though he was
talking about Soviet deputies being revocable agents of power
and also about creating the new state with the armed people, in
practice no concrete steps were taken to realize this. The unavoidable
force of circumstances may be pointed out as the factor preventing
any advancement in this direction. But we have no evidence to
show that Lenin paid any serious attention to this basic question
itself. He did not understand the necessity of evolving a qualitatively
new political system under the dictatorship of the proletariat.
On the other hand, his whole attempt was to achieve this change
by changing the leadership of the state, from a bourgeois one
into that of the proletariat through its party.
8.9. Actually
the structure of the new proletarian state envisaged by Marx and
Engels had nothing to do with the existing structure of the bourgeois
state. This is well reflected in the above quoted statement of
Marx (reabsorption...) and in Engels- statement, "The proletariat
seizes power and... then puts an end to itself as proletariat...
and thus also to the state as state." (Anti-Dühring, Peking,
1976, p. 362) This is the point of departure - a state which itself
becomes the guarantee for the reabsorption of state power by the
society, a state which ceases to be a state in the traditional
sense. How can the proletariat achieve such a goal which involves
deep internal contradictions? Two practical steps taken by the
Paris Commune are in front of us - a political system run through
the revocable agents of power and the replacement of the standing
army by the armed people.
8.10.
But if we are really to achieve a qualitative break with the existing
understanding of political power, we have to go deeper into its
dynamics. In a class society, the dominant class wields political
power claiming to represent the whole society. This reflects a
contradiction between the political will of the ruling class and
that of the society as a whole. It is to resolve this contradiction
that power is concentrated in the state structure and wielded
by the ruling class as its executive power. So this concentration
of the political will of the ruling class in the name of the political
will of the whole society, in the concrete form of the state,
especially in its armed might, is characteristic of the political
power so far existing in class society. The proletariat is aiming
at qualitatively breaking with this structure. It must initiate
a process which makes the society as a whole capable of reabsorbing
this concentrated power. And the replacement of the standing army
by the armed people is a concrete initial step in this direction.
But in the absence of a complete economic, political, social system
which guarantees this reabsorption, this alone will not serve
the purpose. In the whole process, conditions and structures should
be created so that the (political) will of the whole society can
get expressed and realized directly without the mediation of a
state. It is only then that the proletariat can achieve its goal
of a society where the state withers away. If the proletariat
cannot put forward such an alternative political system, it cannot
make any qualitative break with the existing bourgeois system.
8.11.
It is here that the whole system of the dictatorship of the proletariat
so far practised, starting from Lenin and up to Mao, failed. The
whole system revolved around the idea of seizing and maintaining
the political power through a centralized state structure. It
not only did not initiate any process of reabsorption of power
but, on the contrary, led to more concentration of power. Of course,
during the Cultural Revolution, Mao tried to reverse the direction,
but he could not make any qualitative advance since he could not
come out of the basic framework already established. Mao had also
not grasped the importance of a new political organizational structure.
This is what is reflected in his remark that the Soviets of Lenin
could easily be transformed into Khrushchev-s, meaning that the
discovery of Soviets was of no significance.
9. Bourgeois
Dictatorship and Proletarian Democracy
9.1. The
reason for such a basic deviation is to be further investigated.
We may get some clue to understand the problem if we try to look
at how Lenin analyzed bourgeois democracy and attempted to replace
it with the dictatorship of the proletariat. It was absolutely
correct on the part of Lenin to evaluate that all different forms
of bourgeois states are inevitably the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie
and that all the different possible forms of transitional proletarian
state are essentially the dictatorship of the proletariat. But
this aspect of dictatorship is only the essential part, not the
whole of it. A bourgeois democratic state deals with an important
question of human society, the contradiction between individual
and society. But a bourgeois fascist state does not give room
for dealing with that contradiction at the same level, even though
both are essentially dictatorships of the bourgeoisie. For the
first time in the history of human society bourgeois democracy
recognizes the individual as a political entity and gives him/her
a role in the political system, though formally. The weakness
of this bourgeois democracy is that it is based on the rule of
private property whereby it ensures the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie.
Thus the equality professed by it becomes not only formal, but
also bogus.
9.2. It
is on this basis that Lenin stressed on the point: "democracy
based on private property or on a struggle for the abolition of
private property". Here he is emphasizing the class-dominant
aspect of democracy, the rule of private property. But by equating
bourgeois democracy to the bourgeois state, he has neglected the
non-class aspect of democracy reflected in bourgeois democracy.
The recognition of the individual-s political role in the political
system of a society is actually a historical advance in dealing
with the non-class contradiction of individual/ society. Bourgeois
democracy is reflecting this non-class aspect also. It is actually
a development in the forms of social functioning which was (and
is) taking place in the whole process of social development in
close relation with the development of class struggle. Even though
Lenin talks about the formal equality reflected in bourgeois democracy
and its representative nature, he does not demarcate between the
class-dominant and non-class aspects of democracy. So he comes
to the solution of replacing the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie
by the dictatorship of the proletariat by simply reversing the
dictatorship of the minority over the majority into a dictatorship
of the majority over the minority. Hence no qualitative break
with the old structure is required. Ultimately, the old structure
which concentrates political power in the hands of the state leadership
leads to the emergence and strengthening of a new ruling class
from among the working class and the ranks and leadership of its
party itself.
9.3. The
development of proletarian democracy will not take place simply
by reversing the dictatorship of the minority over the majority.
Elimination of private property and socialization of the means
of production are certainly crucial steps for establishing the
system of proletarian democracy or the genuine dictatorship of
the proletariat. But as has already been seen from the experience
of the former socialist countries, the mere juridical socialization
of the means of production is not going to solve this problem.
Rather, that will create concrete conditions for further centralization
of political power since the whole means of production get concentrated
into a single entity. So the real socialization of the economy,
an essential for proletarian democracy, can be achieved only through
an effective political system which can ensure genuine democracy
by decentralizing the political power, by ensuring the realization
of real power by the people directly. So the socialization of
the means of production and the development of a political system
that ensures proletarian democracy are essential, complementary
aspects of the socialist system which must be capable of surviving
on its own.
9.4. Bourgeois
democracy will be transcended only by passing through this transitional
phase of proletarian democracy which will create a new form for
social organization in communism. Here the non-class aspect of
democratic functioning will further develop, creating favourable
conditions for the all-round development of the individual, though
within the contradictory relationship between individual and society.
9.5. Proletarian
democracy is essentially a dictatorship of the proletariat in
the sense that the class interest of the proletariat, of liberating
itself through emancipating the whole of humanity, is aimed at
and achieved through this system. And the economic and political
system envisaged above is ensuring the attainment of such a goal.
Such a social system can exist and survive only if the majority
of the people accept it and protect it as their own. Hence the
role of the communist party in this whole process will be basically
different from that known and practised so far. The communist
party, representing the genuine interests of the proletariat as
the most advanced class, will certainly play the vanguard role
in leading the struggle of the people against the existing bourgeois
reactionary system and smashing it, and in creating and establishing
the new proletarian democratic system. It will also play a very
active political role to ensure the political system as envisaged
by it - politicizing the people throughout the period, and mobilizing
them to defend and develop it. But the survival of this new socialist
system will not depend upon the protective role of the communist
party. Rather the system will survive only by passing the test
of history.
9.6. In
the light of this evaluation of the basic reason for the grave
deviations in the concept and practice of the dictatorship of
the proletariat from the time of Lenin onwards, we will have to
come to the conclusion that the whole practice of the dictatorship
of the proletariat up until now and the experience of building
socialism was marked by serious deviations. As a new social system,
emerging from the old, socialism was bound to suffer from many
blemishes. But apart from those caused by circumstances, the line
followed by communists from Lenin onwards has also played its
part in this. While upholding the heroic effort to create a new
society and the new things which emerged through socialism (things
which have played a positive role in shaping history), as communists
our own task is to focus on our mistakes and correct them, not
justify them in the name of historical limitations. Examining
these mistakes in the light of Marxism, we can see that they really
reflected deviations from the proletarian world outlook. But at
the same time we have to identify in which concrete form it is
reflected. One dominant tendency can be identified as that of
a class-reductionist tendency. That is, analyzing society only
in terms of class and class struggle, thereby neglecting the non-class
aspects in the complex phenomenon of society. Lenin-s one-sidedness
in understanding the complexities of the dictatorship of the proletariat
and his total neglect of the need to develop a political system
will have to be attributed to this class-reductionist approach,
which is still very dominant in the whole communist movement.
9.7. Similarly,
another tendency encouraged by Lenin-s stand on the Party-s central
role in the dictatorship of the proletariat is the dominant thinking
in the communist movement which considers that the party determines
everything in relation to social revolution. A one-sided subjective
approach towards the party, blind faith in the party, etc., get
strengthened as a result of this tendency. Of course, the conscious
vanguard role of the communist party in the social revolution
is still relevant and important. But how can a communist party
play this role? Can it be achieved by imposing an unquestionable
hegemony over the movement and society? Rather, this vanguard
role can be achieved and maintained only if the communist party
has a realistic understanding and it is capable of constantly
remoulding its style of thinking and practice in order to make
its policies and programmes conform to the ever-changing reality.
If such a dynamic and flexible approach is not adopted, any party
will easily degenerate and will be discarded by the people. After
Mao-s finding that the new bourgeoisie is emerging within the
communist party itself, this question has become all the more
important.
10. The Need
for a New Orientation
10.1.
As no socialist country is existing, the proletarian forces have
to seize power anew everywhere. The world situation is favourable
for this. People-s struggles are mounting everywhere unabatedly.
Especially after the collusion between the two superpower blocs,
who were trying to intervene into and utilize each and every anti-imperialist
national liberation struggle in their favour, now the struggles
of oppressed peoples and nations are intensifying more directly
against the whole imperialist system. The advancement of revolution
in Peru, which is uncompromisingly fighting against both the imperialist
blocs, is a good example clearly proving the nature of the revolutionary
potential that is inherent in the present-day world situation.
Many non-communist anti-imperialist forces are also advancing
along the path of struggle more directly and forthrightly.
10.2.
But if these struggles are to be guided along the correct path
of advancing towards socialism and communism, the proletarian
forces are duty-bound to explain to the people how they envisage
the future of revolution. In the context of all the new developments
in the former socialist countries, without a proper programme
for preventing capitalist restoration and the possible degeneration
of proletarian power into social fascism, it is practically impossible
for winning over the struggling peoples of the world on a broad
basis towards socialism and communism. That is why putting forward
such a programme with a new orientation has become all the more
important and urgent.
10.3.
The essential aspects of the new system envisaged under the dictatorship
of the proletariat have already been explained in the previous
two sections. They can be summed up as follows: A qualitatively
new understanding of proletarian political power must be the starting
point. It must reflect Marx-s concept of the Paris Commune - as
the reabsorption of state power by the whole society. So the proletarian
state should not be a state like the bourgeois state or the state
under socialism so far practised by the communists which concentrated
the whole power in the centralized state structure. It will have
to be a new political system in which the state ceases to be a
state by starting the process of reabsorption of state power by
society, through a process of decentralizing political power,
aiming at reaching a stage when the (political) will of the whole
society can get expressed and realized directly without the mediation
of the state. Such a system can be developed only by achieving
the genuine socialization of the means of production, which can
again be assured through a political system which ensures proletarian
democracy. This socialist system, in which the socialized economic
base and the proletarian democratic political system are complementary
aspects, must survive on its own, becoming a social system acceptable
to and practised by the whole people, under the leadership of
the proletariat.
10.4.
The crucial question faced by the proletariat in achieving such
a system will be in relation to evolving the concrete steps for
the transitional phase. The means adopted for smashing the existing
state machinery will be crucial in relation to the new understanding
on political power. Since the existing forms of bourgeois or reactionary
political power are all concentrated in the state structure centred
around the armed forces, proletarian forces can smash them only
by using force. So the revolutionary overthrow of the existing
state will have to be achieved by a violent revolution. This will
be possible only under the leadership of a vanguard party of the
proletariat with its people-s army. The smashing of the existing
state has to be followed by the establishment of the new political
system, again under the leadership of the vanguard party. Here
one of the crucial initial steps will be the arming of the people,
as a part of the process of replacing the standing army with armed
people. At present we will not be able to predict the duration
of this transitional period. But we can definitely define the
criterion to decide the duration of this transitional phase. The
vanguard party of the proletariat will have to play the leading
role until the new political system starts functioning effectively,
by completing the process of the socialization of the means of
production and then consolidating the power in the hands of the
new ruling classes under the leadership of the proletariat. Once
this is achieved the communist party must give up its monopoly
control of the revolutionary transformation and allow the system
to function on its own. Under the proletarian democratic system,
the effectiveness of the new system will be accepted or rejected
by the people through an open democratic process in which the
whole people will be freely involved through their own political
organizations or otherwise.
10.5.
During this transitional phase the role of the party, both in
smashing the state machine and in establishing a new political
structure, will be crucial and central. But even then, after the
seizure of power, the party should not directly wield the power.
Rather it must assert its authority only politically through the
bodies elected by the people. As the party plays this crucial
role in the overthrow of the enemy classes, it will be enjoying
tremendous prestige and authority among the people. During this
phase masses will also be drawn into active political life on
an unprecedented scale. So, even though the party will be playing
the central role, development of its political line through line
struggle, etc., must be known to the people. It means the party
will have to function rather as an open party. The internal life
of the party will also have to be very democratic, even allowing
factions, etc., as a matter of principle.
10.6.
Organs of power by the people will have to be developed by transforming
the united front or other similar forums which were playing an
active role in mobilizing the masses for waging the war against
the enemies into revocable representative bodies. These bodies
must represent the political will of the majority of the people
who have aligned with the working class in the struggle against
the enemy classes. Those belonging to the overthrown enemy classes
will not enjoy the right to be elected to such bodies of power,
and they will be denied other civic rights also during this transitional
phase. During the transitional phase, the attempt must be to make
these bodies the real organs of power, gradually reducing the
role of the party in the whole process of administration.
10.7.
While during the pre-revolutionary phase, the role of armed force
is principal, after the seizure of power, the role of force changes.
Mobilization of the political will of the people becomes principal
while the use of force follows it. This political mobilization
should be carried out mainly through the political bodies, mass
organizations and other open forums under the guidance of the
party. The use of force in general will have to be transformed
from the activity of a special body into the activity of the armed
people themselves.
10.8.
Socialization of the means of production is to be carried out
thoroughly during this transitional phase. As we have already
seen, mere juridical socialization will not solve the basic problem.
The real socialization is closely linked up with developing an
appropriate political structure to make the people capable of
realizing the power in their own hands. So by developing the socialization
process, both at the economic and political level, a genuine socialized
economy can be promoted.
10.9.
Once the functioning of the new political and economic system
develops in this way, the communist party should formally relinquish
its monopoly of power. Its right to govern should be strictly
based on the electoral support gained by its platform, just like
any other platform. The essential characteristics of the new political
structure will be the rule through decentralized, revocable representative
bodies, guarantee of all democratic rights including universal
suffrage, abolition of the standing army, etc., and its legitimacy
will be based on the protection and development of the socialist
system leading to communism. Since socialism itself is a period
of revolutionary transformation, this system itself will have
to evolve further. The question of such changes in the political-social-economic
structure will itself be a matter of class struggle. And the communist
party must play its vanguard role in leading this class struggle
by politicizing and mobilizing the masses on the basis of the
correct line. But unlike in the hitherto practised forms of the
dictatorship of the proletariat, in the new political structure,
the people wielding the real power in their own hands, also with
the arms in their hands, will be playing a very active role in
the whole political life of the society, thereby being the best
guarantee against restoration and also ensuring the best conditions
for seizing back power if restoration takes place.
11. Role and
Functioning of the Communist Party
11.1.
Now, let us see what will be the role of the party in this new
scheme of things. Lenin defined the Communist Party as the organized
vanguard of the proletariat to lead the working class and other
sections of the people in the revolutionary seizure of political
power. We can see, here also, the influence of the lessons of
the Paris Commune.
11.2.
The principle of democratic centralism, evolved and implemented
by Lenin, is still the most effective and advanced principle of
functioning for any social organization. The iron discipline of
the party envisaged in this system is necessary for an organization
which wages a revolutionary war against the superior enemy forces.
As far as the functioning of this system is concerned, Lenin provided
the best model of dialectically linking up the democratic functioning
within the organization before taking the final decision, with
its implementation in a centralized manner. If this internal democracy
is not ensured, the whole system can easily degenerate into an
authoritarian centralism, and this usually happens, as the revolutionary
organizations occasionally face emergency situations when internal
democracy will have to be curtailed. But if this is not strictly
limited to such special circumstances and internal democracy is
not ensured as a basic principle, the possibility for deviation
is very much there. And this is the major weakness of the system
of democratic centralism.
11.3.
The practice under Lenin shows that there was a free and lively
atmosphere within the organization to voice different views and
opinions and to debate over such differences. In the post-revolutionary
situation, groups were allowed to function openly and even to
publish their own materials separately. But in the context of
growing counter-revolutionary attempts, the 10th Congress of the
Party (in 1921) under Lenin-s guidance decided to ban such factions
and their separate functioning. Even though it can be seen as
a particular decision in a particular context, the approach adopted
in the resolution and the nature of discussion in the Congress
shows that the decision was arrived at on the basis of the principle
of unity. The 10th Congress resolution on Party Unity declared,
"The Congress... hereby declares dissolved and orders the
immediate dissolution of all groups without exception formed on
the basis of one platform or another (such as the Workers- Opposition
Group, the Democratic Centralism Group, etc.). Non-observance
of this decision of the Congress shall entail unconditional and
instant expulsion from the Party." (LCW, Vol. 32, p. 244)
The same resolution explained the approach towards the question:
"In this question, propaganda should consist, on the one
hand, in a comprehensive explanation of the harmfulness and danger
of factionalism from the standpoint of Party unity and of achieving
unanimity of will among the vanguard of the proletariat as the
fundamental condition for the success of the dictatorship of the
proletariat; and, on the other hand, in an explanation of the
peculiar features of the latest tactical devices of the enemies
of the Soviet power." (Ibid, p. 242)
11.4.
Afterwards, the whole concept of the monolithic communist party,
propounded by Stalin and solidified during the whole Comintern
period and afterwards, was centred around this 10th Congress decision.
And this monolithism naturally gave rise to an atmosphere where
centralism was always emphasized, while democracy was belittled
or neglected. Stalin-s open declaration that the dictatorship
of the proletariat is in essence "the dictatorship of the
Party" strengthened this trend. Any opposition to the leadership
could be suppressed using the state machinery in the name of establishing
this "dictatorship".
11.5.
Mao-s attempts to develop the two-line struggle within the party
was a step to re-establish the style of functioning of democratic
centralism practised by Lenin, in a more systematic manner. He
could also bring forward the question of correct ideological and
political line as the determining factor in establishing the correct
leadership of the party. But as Mao did not openly criticize the
above concepts, in effect the two-line struggle, etc., were only
some minor steps at rectification within the overall framework
established earlier.
11.6.
The sanctification of the party and the consequent religious attitude
towards it developed on the basis of the above concepts. The concepts
of revolutionary authority put forward by Stalin by defining Leninism
and establishing the authority of Lenin, intensified the negative
effects of this religiosity. All views of the opponents of the
established authority were considered not only irrelevant but
taboos to the communists. For example, while criticizing their
ideas, nobody thought it necessary to examine whether any ideas
put forward by Kautsky, Rosa Luxemburg, Trotsky, Bukharin, etc.,
were correct and worthwhile for consideration. Even though Mao-s
style of open two-line struggle through open debate and polemics
created a new atmosphere, we can see that even during the Cultural
Revolution the concept of revolutionary authority emerged in a
more powerful way, again curtailing the democratic atmosphere.
The personality cult, as the follow-up of the concept of revolutionary
authority, assumed dangerous dimensions during the Cultural Revolution,
especially at the instance of Lin Piao. Our own experience in
the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) regarding the
consequences of the concept of the revolutionary authority of
comrade Charu Majumdar is a case in point.
11.7.
After we have reached the stage of Mao-s finding that the bourgeoisie
emerging within the communist party is the most important danger
faced by the dictatorship of the proletariat, it is high time
that we re-examine this whole experience in relation to the dictatorship
of the proletariat and the party-s role in it, especially in a
context when the people are rising up in revolt against the so-called
communist parties which were ruling them in the name of proletarian
dictatorship. No eye-wash is going to save the situation. A thorough
re-examination of the concept and role of the communist party
in the historical process of building socialism and communism
is the need of the hour. Instead of making the party the whole
centre of political power, a new organizational structure and
approach for the party have to be evolved suiting the working
class aim of abolishing classes themselves. Some possible steps
are suggested here:
12.1.
Demystification of the Communist Party.
The communist
party-s role of being the vanguard of the proletariat is to be
tested and proved in the course of the historical process. Whether
it serves the proletarian class interest or not is also to be
judged by examining whether its programmes and policies conform
to the changing reality, making it capable of leading the class
struggle of the working class and other sections of the people
against the exploiting classes under a given condition. The proletariat
class interest itself, under a given condition, is very much relative,
changing according to the changing reality, though the ultimate
interest of the working class, of building communism, remains
as a long-term goal. Under a given condition, the tasks of a specific
revolution, or its stage, can be defined; but that itself will
be subject to change and modification, even though the basic outlook
of the proletariat on that specific revolutionary phase will remain
constant. Only when a communist party realizes its delicate position
in this way, when it realizes that it is always subject to the
test of historical reality, can it come down to the complexities
of reality. Then only can it realize that no authority has been
bestowed upon it either by the working class and the people or
by history. It can only serve the people. Here we may note the
qualitative distinction between the party leading a revolution
to seize power and the party with monopoly in power. In the first
case, the party is compelled by the very context to be self-critical
and continuously correct and develop its line and practice in
order to mobilize the masses for revolution. But in the second
case, the pressure of circumstances operates in the opposite direction.
When this is coupled with the sanctification of the party degeneration
is not far off.
12.2. Discard the concept of the Revolutionary Authority
Marxism
is an ever developing philosophy and science. It has got the potential
to assimilate the wealth of knowledge produced by innumerable
branches of human investigation. It is true that the leadership
of a real revolutionary movement can contribute much more than
anybody else. But if the contributions to Marxism are limited
to such personalities of specific periods, then the development
of Marxism will be much curtailed. During the period of Stalin-s
authority the negative effect of such a policy was fully manifested.
Even during the rich experience of the Chinese revolution only
Mao-s contributions were counted for the enrichment of Marxism.
Moreover, as in the case of Stalin, while we refuse to recognize
the contribution by anybody other than the authority, generally
we also refuse to recognize any mistake committed by that authority.
Even the Marxist-Leninist forces, including us, tried to defend
the mistakes of Stalin by arguing that his intentions were to
serve the proletarian interest. We were forgetting that such an
argument is thoroughly anti-Marxist, because Marxism teaches us
to evaluate the correctness of any policy not on the basis of
the subjective intention of its author, but on the basis of actual
results. The concept of the revolutionary authority created a
kind of blind obedience or a sort of religiosity among the followers.
Without smashing this religiosity, Marxism cannot re-establish
its vitality and vigorous scientificity.
12.3. Constant remoulding of the style of thinking and functioning
On the
basis of the above approach a thorough remoulding of the style
of thinking and functioning is to be carried out throughout the
organization. We had already started to tackle the question of
remoulding the style of thinking and functioning, and have developed
some concepts and practice also in that direction. We have to
further develop them including the above findings also.
13. Some Further
Questions
13.1.
The above evaluation of the past experiences and the suggestions
put forward as theoretical and practical solutions of the crisis
faced by the communist movement are to be considered only as beginning
steps in this direction. An important aspect totally left out
here is the analysis of the philosophical basis for the deviations
committed by the communist movement and the steps for rectifying
them. The question is very important and vital so far as a genuine
communist movement is concerned. Even though there is a consistent
philosophical approach behind our analysis and investigations
as an undercurrent, we have to take up the study of this subject
specifically and thoroughly, which is not attempted here.
13.2.
In our analysis above, we have already identified one tendency
existing for a long period in the whole communist movement - that
of class-reductionism. Actually, during the past few years, when
we were developing the new line, we were confronting this problem
again and again. In understanding the national question itself,
we faced this problem. Even though we resolved the problem of
counterposing the class struggle with national struggle, we had
not yet grasped the non-class aspects of the national question
because of our own class-reductionist approach. While breaking
with the old mechanical approach on the woman question and caste
question we had recognized the non-class aspects involved in these
questions. Still we had not started a struggle against the class-reductionist
tendency which is well entrenched in our thinking. So, in these
specific areas also we are facing serious obstacles, which can
be overcome only when we really start a struggle against the concrete
manifestations of this class-reductionist approach. Now we are
realizing the importance of the non-class aspect of the individual-society
relationship, in relation with the task of developing proletarian
democracy. Also we realize the gravity of the setback suffered
by the communist movement due to the lack of a correct dialectical
understanding between class and non-class aspects involved in
developing a political and economic system during the transitional
phase of socialism.
13.3.
In this relation, there is another important question which has
not yet been taken up for discussion. Marxism is facing a serious
theoretical challenge from the environmentalist movement emerging
and developing all over the world. The crisis of the capitalist
mode of production is getting exposed in the form of the dark
future of the whole of humanity and this globe itself. The environmentalists
raise the relevant question that socialism could not produce any
alternate model of production forces other than developing the
production forces already given by capitalism, and thus show the
way to overcome this crisis. During the Cultural Revolution, Mao
had answered this question, even though from a different angle.
He exposed the reactionary nature of the theory of the productive
forces which was very much dominant in the whole communist movement,
especially during the period of socialist construction, and established
the course of revolutionary transformation based on the revolution
in production relations. By emphasising the need to resolve the
contradiction between town and countryside, he introduced a different
concept of developing the production forces themselves. Actually
this provided the theoretical basis for an alternate mode of production
under socialism. During the Cultural Revolution many breakthroughs
at the practical level also were achieved. Of course this is only
a beginning. More questions are to be solved in this area.
13.4.
While we have realized the complex nature of the individual/ society
relationship, it demands further deepening of our understanding
on the differences and interrelationship between the class-individual
and non-class individual. Marx had already pointed out this division
between personal and class individual. Marx said: "...in
the course of historical evolution... there appears a division
within the life of each individual in so far as it is personal
and in so far as it is determined by some branch of labour and
the conditions pertaining to it." (The German Ideology, MESW,
Moscow, Vol. 1, p. 66) But this question was not taken for consideration
afterwards. It is in relation to this individual/society contradiction
that the question of value system comes in. The Marxist position
that there are no eternal values, and that the value system of
different periods are closely linked with the socio-economic systems
of each period has already been proven beyond doubt. But at the
same time, the role of the complex interrelationship between class
individual and non-class individual in shaping the value systems
of each period is to be studied further. Moreover, while struggling
against the existing value system, the revolutionary movement
has got the responsibility to develop new alternate value systems
according to the specific stages of revolution. The value system
is closely linked up with the dynamics of the cultural realm which
plays a very important role in the whole social fabric. But generally
this task of developing the new value system is neglected while
focusing on the economic and political tasks.
13.5.
While we had tried to grasp the dynamics of capitalist restoration
in the former socialist countries, we had realized the role of
mechanical materialism which had dominated over the whole revisionist
thinking. Now we see that in the whole history of the communist
movement, the dominance of mechanical materialism played an important
role in the deviations analyzed above. In spite of the positive
role played by Lenin and Mao, in defeating the influence of mechanical
materialism, as a whole it dominated over the movement. The economic
reductionism in the form of the theory of the productive forces
and many other forms, and class-reductionism reflected in the
neglect of other aspects of social dynamics, are the major manifestations
of this influence. Even though Marx and Engels considered settling
accounts with mechanical materialism as important as settling
accounts with idealism, the communist movement as a whole has
not been able to carry forward the task as was needed. Lenin and
Mao could make significant contributions in this direction, but
the state of affairs in the movement as a whole remained very
negative.
13.6.
As Lenin correctly pointed out Marx did not give us a "logic
with a (capital) L". Even though Marx-s methodology of materialist
dialectics is well applied in his theoretical works, he could
not sum it up in the form of a systematic exposition of dialectical
logic. Lenin was referring to this. And Lenin and Mao contributed
in the course of their attempts at the application of Marxian
dialectics, according to the concrete conditions they faced. Still,
we can see that materialist dialectics remains at a very preliminary
level. And this backwardness is reflected in the continuous, repeated
experiences of one-sidedness, inability to grasp the emerging
new phenomena, etc, in the whole communist movement. Our own experience
shows how late we were in grasping the actual social dynamics
of our own societies. And even now we are only at a preliminary
level in achieving this task.
14. Conclusion
14.1.
Marx made the following illuminating, objective observation about
the proletarian revolutions of the mid-19th century in which he
was a direct and intimate participant: "...proletarian revolutions
like those of the 19th century criticize themselves constantly,
interrupt themselves continually in their own course, come back
to the apparently accomplished in order to begin it afresh, deride
with unmerciful thoroughness the inadequacies, weaknesses, and
paltrinesses of their first attempts, seem to throw down their
adversary only in order that he may draw new strength from the
earth and rise again, more gigantic, before them, recoil ever
and anon from the indefinite prodigiousness of their own aims,
until a situation has been created which makes all turning back
impossible...." (The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte,
MESW, Vol. 1, p. 401) Marx is talking about the spontaneous proletarian
revolutions whereas we are now discussing the 20th century proletarian
revolutions led by the conscious vanguard of the proletariat,
the communist parties. Still, the above observation gives us a
deeper insight into the method we have to adopt for evaluating
the experiences of the 20th century revolutions. Now, we realize
that these experiences cannot be analyzed merely at the level
of the subjective weakness of the communist parties. Rather, they
have outgrown this to the level of the historical reality of this
period. They have to be understood and evaluated in the broader,
objective canvas of the history of the period. The communists
of the 20th century have to be the most active, vanguard participants
in this process. They have to analyze "with unmerciful thoroughness
the inadequacies, weaknesses and paltrinesses" of their previous
attempts. And this will have to be repeated again and again, "until
a situation has been created which makes all turning back impossible",
because we realize that the path of making proletarian revolutions
for realizing communism is a very protracted and tortuous one.
14.2.
All the subjective and objective experiences of the whole communist
movement as well as the whole historical experiences of this period
amply prove that the historical materialist approach developed
by Marxism is the only effective tool in our hands to comprehend
the complexities of social dynamics and the process of historical
development. The same tool helps us to understand the weaknesses
of the communist movement itself. And this is one of the most
important revolutionary qualities of Marxism. The analysis and
attempts at rectification are to be grasped in this background.
When the people of the former socialist countries put the communist
strategy of monopoly power for the party during the whole transitional
phase of socialism on the dock of history, communists cannot remain
satisfied with the consolation that this is the result of backward
thinking among the people. On the contrary, these experiences
again and again indicate the Marxist teaching that the people
alone are the creators of history. Communists have to be humble
enough to learn from this experience without any attempts to cover
up their own weaknesses and mistakes. Then only can they regain
their vanguard role in the process of ever advancing historical
developments. Communists have to ruthlessly expose and defeat
the brand of Marxism propagated and practised in the form of sterile,
dead dogmas. Marxism is a dynamic philosophy and guide to revolutionary
practice. Our urgent historical task is to regain its vitality
and dynamism in order to carry forward the task of revolution
at all levels.